Author Archives: Kerry Bolton

Kerry Bolton

Kerry Bolton is a Fellow of the Academy of Social and Political Research, Athens; assistant editor of the Academy's journal Ab Aeterno; "contributing writer" for Foreign Policy Journal, and proprietor of Renaissance Press. He has doctorates and certificates in theology, sociology, psychology, and biblical studies. He has been widely published in the scholarly and broader media, including the "Thoughts and Perspectives" series (Black Front Press). His recent books include Revolution from Above (Arktos, 2011), Artists of the Right: Resisting Decadence (Counter-Currents, 2012), Stalin: The Enduring Legacy (Black House Publishing, 2012), The Parihaka Cult (Black House Publishing, 2012) and The Psychotic Left (Black House Publishing, 2013).

A farmer in a small Russian village could have provided the key to Russia’s resurgence, and indeed to that of every state, family, and individual in thrall to usury. However, the kolion has been banned as a “threat” to the rouble. Read more …

The Spanish Civil War was a total war, a literal battle of good against evil, as the Republican forces, Social Democrats, Communists, and anarchists, burnt churches and killed priests and nuns[1] in a blood frenzy that brought hell to Spain. They were opposed by the core of the old military led by General Francisco Franco, joined by the militias of the monarchist Carlist movement and the Falangists. Read more …

For one (whose Absence fills the land entire
With one mad love to emulate his fire)
At the same moment, to the firing squad
Spurning his body, launched his soul to God
Whose epic line (no flourish of the pen)
Was life and rapture, and whose words were men Read more …

In the denazification atmosphere following World War II Carl Jung, founder of analytical psychology, found himself accused of having ‘Nazi’ sympathies. While Jung was a man of the ‘Right’[1] his essay explaining Hitlerism as an evocation of Wotan as a repressed archetype of the German collective unconscious put him on the long suspect list of intellectuals who were accused of being apologists for National Socialism.[2] He was fortunate to have been in a neutral nation in the aftermath of World War II.